Without freedom to touch, blind migrants disoriented in virus-hit S.Africa
By Agence France-Presse
Sheets of braille were scattered around Jetro Gonese as he sat hunched over his mattress in a dilapidated building in downtown Johannesburg, punching away at the keys of his special typewriter.
Jetro Gonese and his braille typewriter. South Africa's anti-coronavirus lockdown has had a devastating impact on the visually impaired (AFP Photo/Luca Sola)
Sightless since childhood, 60-year-old Gonese, a Zimbabwean immigrant in South Africa, has been confined to the tiny room he shares with another visually-impaired man since the start of an anti-coronavirus lockdown in March.
In a new world where people must keep their distance and avoid contact with surfaces, the blind have found themselves deprived of their compass.
"Touch is what we call the queen sense," Gonese explained.
"It enables us to recognize and identify most things... the texture of surfaces, your skin or your hand. It is very central in our lives."
None of the building's 200-odd residents can afford sanitizer or face masks. Most are the families of disabled immigrants like Gonese, who scrape a living by begging on the streets.
Strict confinement measures and vulnerability to the virus have forced these sightless breadwinners to remain indoors.
"It is dangerous for us to shake hands or touch any surfaces because you might contract the disease," Gonese said, adding that police enforcing lockdown rules had chased him home the few times he ventured outdoors.
"So communication has been very difficult for us... because we are afraid to touch things."
Jetro Gonese and his braille typewriter. South Africa's anti-coronavirus lockdown has had a devastating impact on the visually impaired (AFP Photo/Luca Sola)
Sightless since childhood, 60-year-old Gonese, a Zimbabwean immigrant in South Africa, has been confined to the tiny room he shares with another visually-impaired man since the start of an anti-coronavirus lockdown in March.
In a new world where people must keep their distance and avoid contact with surfaces, the blind have found themselves deprived of their compass.
"Touch is what we call the queen sense," Gonese explained.
"It enables us to recognize and identify most things... the texture of surfaces, your skin or your hand. It is very central in our lives."
None of the building's 200-odd residents can afford sanitizer or face masks. Most are the families of disabled immigrants like Gonese, who scrape a living by begging on the streets.
Strict confinement measures and vulnerability to the virus have forced these sightless breadwinners to remain indoors.
"It is dangerous for us to shake hands or touch any surfaces because you might contract the disease," Gonese said, adding that police enforcing lockdown rules had chased him home the few times he ventured outdoors.
"So communication has been very difficult for us... because we are afraid to touch things."